meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

What Do I Do If There’s a Sin I Can’t Shake?

Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

J.D. Greear

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.9624 Ratings

🗓️ 10 October 2022

⏱️ 15 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, Pastor J.D. answers the question, "What do I do if there's a sin I can't shake?" and gives some practical ways to fight sin.

Show Notes:

* If we're honest, we all ask this question at some point because we all have seasons of suffering with sin.
* Now, let me say: for some people, the sins they can't shake would fall into the addiction category, in which case you'd need additional resources to help fight that. We'll talk more about that later. But even when dealing with addictions, some of the core things I'm saying would still apply.
* The Bible tells us that we'll be locked in a struggle between our spirit when it's been renewed in Christ and our flesh for our entire lives.
* Even the Apostle Paul was very honest about his struggles with sin—and that's after doing so many amazing things for Christ!
* My advice would probably be three things:
* First, just never, ever give up the fight.

* The worst thing to do is to say, "I'll never overcome this, so I'll stop fighting it." Tim Keller talks about how the Christian life feels like a battle we can never win, when in reality, it's a battle we can never lose. When you re-believe the gospel and you preach it to yourself, that actually infuses the power of new life into you.


* Second, it’s important to realize that fighting sin is about learning grace.

C.S. Lewis talked about this: God sometimes lets us struggle with lesser sins to keep us from the greatest one: PRIDE.

So, God may let you struggle with certain sins so that you will stay closely tethered to his grace. That doesn’t mean you ever stop praying for victory, just that God is up to something good even in delaying the answer.In my library I have this book of letters by John Newton, the writer of the famous hymn Amazing Grace, and one of my favorites is one he wrote in his 80’s to a friend where he confessed that by this point in his life he had always assumed that after walking with God for 50 to 60 years he’d have gotten complete victory over his temptations. He said that some of those temptations, however, felt stronger than ever. And at first that made him depressed, wondering if something was fundamentally wrong with him spiritually--maybe not saved. But in this letter he told his friend that now he realized that God let him struggle with some of these sinful temptations and probably would until the day he died to keep him from the worst sin: pride. “True growth in grace, he said, this side of the resurrection, (listen to this) doesn’t mean getting to a place where you no longer feel like you need God’s grace, but growing in your awareness of just how desperate for God’s grace that you really are.” John Newton
You learn to lean on God in failure, not in success. It’s like John Stott says, “Pride is your greatest enemy, humility is your greatest friend.”




* Finally, a great way to fight sin is to institute new spiritual disciplines. 

You might not be utilizing spiritual weaponry… you read the Bible and confess your sins, but it’s like using a water gun to put out a house fire.
Fasting is essentially you starving the flesh in order to feed and grow the spirit.
Radical accountability
Scripture memorization
Counter talking
Be killing sin or it will be killing you.
Books: 

Letters of Newton

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, everybody.

0:03.0

Hey, everybody, welcome to Ask Me Anything. I'm Matt Love. I'm here with Pastor J.D. Greer.

0:23.3

And today, I think Pastor J.D. has a question that we're going to ask him that I think a lot of us have probably experienced in some way or another.

0:31.4

The question is, why are there sins that you can't seem to shake no matter how much you pray?

0:35.9

And I guess the subtext of this is,

0:37.9

you know, maybe you've been struggling with something for a long time. You're asking God to

0:41.5

help you defeat the sin, to help you get over it. But it just continues to be a struggle. It

0:47.2

continues to be a struggle. And if you have such a hard time getting out of it, maybe it feels like

0:50.8

God isn't answering that prayer. So Pastor D.D, help us with this. Why are there sins that you can't seem to shake even when you're praying a lot for those things?

0:59.2

Yeah, Matt, I appreciate the honesty, the transparency of that question. And let me just say

1:04.8

from the beginning that that's something that all of us, regardless of what level of spiritual

1:09.7

maturity you're at, brand new Christian,

1:12.7

seasoned Christian. If you're honest, you're going to have that question. In fact, it's one

1:17.5

of those things that if one person begins to admit it, you know, honestly, it's sometimes

1:22.0

in your small group type of setting, you'll find a lot of people will tell you that's been

1:25.6

their experience as well. For some people, this is actually, let me also acknowledge this, just as we begin, for some people,

1:30.4

this is actually, I mean, it's more in the addiction category. And a lot of what I'm going to say

1:35.2

today, you would need additional resources to actually talk about addiction. And I'll get that

1:40.1

at the very end. But I think even when you're dealing with addiction, some of the core things I'm going to say here would still apply. You know, the Bible presents, and much I might say to my

1:50.2

chagrin, that for our entire lives, we are going to be locked in a struggle where the spirit

1:58.7

that has been renewed in Christ and the flesh, which is still under, to use Paul's

2:03.3

language, the law of sin, are going to make war against each other. That's what Roman 7 says. I mean,

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from J.D. Greear, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of J.D. Greear and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.